United States v. New England Coal & Coke Co.

74 F. Supp. 119, 1947 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2035
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedSeptember 18, 1947
DocketNo. 1032
StatusPublished

This text of 74 F. Supp. 119 (United States v. New England Coal & Coke Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. New England Coal & Coke Co., 74 F. Supp. 119, 1947 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2035 (D. Mass. 1947).

Opinion

FORD, District Judge.

This is a libel filed by the United States as owner of the S. S. Benjamin Williams seeking to recover for damage alleged to have been done to the vessel on or about October 19, 1942, while under charter to the respondent New England Coal & Coke Company (hereinafter called the Coal Company). The charterer duly impleaded a public wharfinger, the Mystic Terminal Company (hereinafter called Terminal), on the ground that if there was any damage it was caused by Terminal in discharging a cargo of coal.

It appears from the pleadings that the charter party entered into between the petitioner and respondent contained the following : “Cargo to be loaded and discharged free of any expense to the vessel, except the vessel is to pay the customary dumping and/ or trimming charges at loading port.” The charterer contends that if there is any liability on its part, it should be shifted to the stevedore Terminal.

Terminal in its answer admits it unloaded the Benjamin Williams at Boston on October 19 and 20, 1942, in accordance with a contract between it and the charterer. It further alleges that only slight unavoidable damage was done to the steamship due to the light manner in which the vessel was constructed and that at no time did it cause damage to the vessel through is negligence in unloading.

The Facts.

The S. S. Benjamin Williams, a liberty type ship, was commissioned and delivered to the operators on October 4, 1942. On October 10 the petitioner chartered the vessel to the Coal Company for its maiden voyage, from Norfolk, Virginia, to Boston. A cargo of coal was loaded at Norfolk on October 13 and the ship proceeded to Boston, arriving at the dock of Terminal on October 19.

Arrangements were made with Terminal for the discharge of the cargo. Under the agreement the entire operation of discharging was conducted by Terminal and payment for the service was made in accordance with published rates. The rate paid by the Coal Company was substantially higher than that charged for the unloading of a coal collier, because the S.S. Benjamin Williams is a tween deck vessel.

The process of unloading began at, 3 p. m. on the afternoon of the 19th and continued until 11 p. m. It was resumed at 8 a. m. of the 20th and completed at 11 p. m. that night. At 10 a. m. of the 21st, the vessel left without cargo for New York, where it arrived on the 23rd at the Erie Basin, Brooklyn. There, on the following day, a survey was conducted by Merton R. Clancy, surveyor of the United States Salvage As[120]*120sociation, Inc., of damage done to the vessel during the unloading in Boston. The surveyor held a Chief Engineer’s license and had served as surveyor with the United States Salvage Association, Inc., for 21^ years, making at least 2,000 surveys. Many of the latter were made on Liberty ships. There was no question as to his competency. Witness Clancy made an extensive report, which was admitted in evidence,.dated November 4, 1942, in which the items of damage were set out with particularity together with recommendations as to the manner in which the repairing was to be done. There were thirty-three items of damage1 involving pipe casing brackets, trucking plates, tank tops, ladders, ceiling boards and cargo battens of the ship. There was a statement in the report that Captain D. L. Madison of the Benjamin Williams reported that this damage was caused by dropping large buckets on the parts damaged. Clancy estimated the cost of repairs to be $13,950 of which the sum of $691 was actually spent to make repairs.

Captain Nils Asplund, Chief Mate of the Benjamin Williams, testified that the Benjamin Williams was a normal general cargo ship whose tank tops were covered only in the square of the hatch by approximately two or three-inch boards. He stated that unlike coal-carrying colliers there was no [121]*121covering over the tank tops in the wings of the vessel. He testified that four-ton clam shell buckets were used in the unloading. These buckets were suspended from three cranes on the dock. The latter extended about seventy feet above the deck of the vessel. The vessel had five hatches, two were empty, and the remaining three hatches were used to load the coal and, in the unloading, one clam shell bucket was operating in each hold at the same time. Captain Asplund testified, and I find all his testimony to be true, that he notified the hatch foreman employed by Terminal while the unloading was proceeding that the vessel was a Liberty type ship and lightly constructed and “any damage that he would probably do to the ship would show up.” On the afternoon of the 20th, he stated he heard “the bucket being dumped heavily in the hold” and he cautioned the crane operator of No. 2 hold. This happened, he testified, ten or fifteen times. On that day the Chief Mate went to Terminal’s office and made a written report to Mr. James J. Brennan, general foreman of Terminal, of damage to the ship caused by Terminal. An entry in the vessel’s log reflected this fact. In substance, the report, also signed by Brennan as the “representative of party causing damage”, stated the damage was to the “Hatch-combings, Flooring, Ladders, Swetbattens, #2, #3, #4 hatch. Tunnel #4.” The extent of damage was described as “Apparent (sic) damage slight and unavoidable.” This was inserted in the report at Mr. Brennan’s suggestion. The latter refused to sign without that statement. It was stated in the report that damage occurred “By buckets discharging”. The Chief Mate also stated in his deposition that he could not determine the extent of the damage at the time he signed the report because of the presence of coal in the holds. No damage of any sort was done in the holds after the vessel left Boston as no work was going on. Asplund also testified the vessel was a brand new ship and the cargo was the first it carried. The Chief Mate was allowed to testify without objection that a Liberty ship carrying coal could be unloaded without damage if the buckets were handled “very” carefully and the damage to the tank tops that he observed on the way back to New York was not due to reasonable wear and tear and could have been “avoided by careful handling of the buckets”.

On cross examination the Chief Mate testified he observed that “when we got down to the bottom, the trimmers were trimming coal in piles alongside the covering in the square of the hatch and they swung the buckets by a wire that was manipulating the buckets to get the swing on the bucket into the sides of the hold and dumped the bucket on top of the pile that the trimmers had made.” This was that part of the hold where there was no protection over the tank tops as there was in the square of the hold. The witness stated it was on either side of the wooden ceiling over the tank tops under the square of the hatch that he observed the damage. In cross examination the Chief Mate testified, and I find as a fact, that he complained to general foreman Brennan that No. 2 crane operator was careless and the foreman shifted the operator of No. 4 crane to No. 2 crane when No. 4 hold was emptied. He further stated that some of the damage he observed occurred in No. 2 hold where crane #2 was operating.

Witness Merton R. Clancy, the surveyor, stated in his report, that the damage to the ladders and a small percentage of the damaged ceiling boards could be regarded as reasonable wear and tear. This damage he testified amounted to $450. The remainder of the damage Clancy stated was caused by improper handling of the discharging operation. Mr.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
74 F. Supp. 119, 1947 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2035, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-new-england-coal-coke-co-mad-1947.